For patients at elevated suicide or violence risk, clinicians work collaboratively with individuals and their support systems to temporarily reduce access to firearms and other lethal means. This may include safety planning and use of tools like Lock to Live to support decision-making.
Lethal means counseling is an evidence-informed intervention designed to reduce the risk of injury among people at risk of suicide.1,2 It gives healthcare providers tools to:
Healthcare providers can use lethal means safety counseling to work alongside their patients and patients’ families to find mutually agreeable solutions that temporarily reduce access to firearms and, in turn, reduce their risk of firearm-related injury or death.3
The first step in lethal means counseling is to identify patients at risk for injury or death by a lethal means, including firearms. This typically involves the use of mental health diagnostic tools to assess conditions such as depression and suicidality, which are beyond the scope of this tool.
Patients receiving lethal means counseling are usually those who are at acute risk of violence to themselves, or to others, such as patients with:
For more information on screening and identifying patients at risk of injury, see the Firearm Injury Risk Screening section with example tools and resources.
Once a patient is identified as at acute risk for firearm injury or death, lethal means counseling often involves motivational interviewing techniques to explore the patient’s perceived benefits and barriers to reducing firearms access. Clinicians should avoid language that may be perceived as threatening (such as ‘confiscate’) and emphasize the temporary nature of the change. Healthcare providers may include this topic as part of a broader discussion around other potential lethal means (e.g., medications), which may help reduce patients’ concerns about firearm safety discussions.
When the patient has access to a firearm, the focus of lethal means counseling is to collaboratively identify more secure storage options and alternatives with the patient and their family members to temporarily reduce access to firearms and therefore reduce the risk of firearm-related injury or death. One helpful tool that supports the safety planning process is the online resource Lock to Live.
In some states, clinicians, in partnership with patients and families, may request Extreme Risk Protection Orders (ERPOs) from a civil court as another tool to temporarily restrict firearm access to individuals who present a risk to themselves or others.4
Lethal means counseling may also be part of Safety Planning— a collaborative process in which the provider and patient identify steps to take during a mental health crisis or if experiencing suicidal ideation. Safety planning involves identifying:
Lethal means counseling plays a critical role in this final step.
Clinicians may receive training on strategies such as lethal means counseling and safety planning as part of injury or suicide prevention training programs.5